Alternative Medicine
Alternative Medicine
"ALTERNATIVE" MEDICINE
by Peter J. Nebergall,
PhD
There are a great many "alternative
medical products" available to the consumer today. Some claim efficacy
regarding diabetes. A few of these have yet to be tested by the medical establishment
and the Food and Drug Administration. These may have merit--we just don't know
it yet. Others have been tested, and found to be without merit, too variable
in their success rate ("you pays your money and you takes your chances"),
or too potentially harmful to the user--but still we clamor to buy them, and,
as consumers, we're not particularly selective.
We could stand to be. America has a
long tradition of "medicine shows," "carny barkers," "cure-alls,"
and "snake oil salesmen." We are fascinated with the possibility of
cheap, quick, simple, miraculous cures--with relief from arthritis, incontinence,
psoriasis, and male pattern baldness thrown in at no extra charge. Can you make
it rain, too?
Skilled hucksters see us coming. They
know what we want, and they give it to us, in a bright, attractive package and
a shower of dubious testimonials. To cover their tracks, many of them cite mythical,
ancient, or deeply flawed research studies. Others take a more paranoid line:
"What the doctors don't want you to know!" or simply "No More
Doctors!" That strategic hint of scandal, of coverup, juices up sales.
The idea that there is a "Medical Conspiracy," that the doctors are
holding out on us, brings on a buying frenzy.
Why do we fall for this? Why are we
so willing to be taken? Why have so many lost faith in their doctors? It is
partly the fault of the doctors, who in their haste to "become more scientific,"
have become increasingly detached from the doctor- patient relationship. Some
of it is the fault of the medical establishment, which, for whatever its reasons,
steadily increases prices, year after year, far past the rate of inflation,
pricing medical care out of reach for many, with tragic consequences. But a
large part of the problem is ours, as consumers.
We, the consumers of health care, need
to educate ourselves. Any "con man" will tell you he looks for "suckers,"
for folks willing to fall for jazzy presentation at the expense of content,
and the medical field has its share. We need to become far more critical; if
it sounds like a slick sales presentation, it probably is.
Even more so, we need to accept responsibility
for our own well-being. I have spoken to too many who rationalize their unhealthy
lifestyles with an unreasoning, almost religious faith in their doctors' ability
to cure them of whatever. Doctors are not magicians. The medical profession
sometimes fails. We need to accept the humanity, the imperfection of current
medicine, and do the best we can, rather than turning to alternative sources
who promise us the unachievable in return for our wallets and the contents thereof.
The snake-oil salesman exists because
we want him; we want the easy answers he offers. As long as we are impatient
with the slow pace of reality, and as long as our service providers insist on
stretching the definition of "reasonable charges," there will be snake-oil
salesmen, selling us the answers we want to hear. For the sake of our health,
it is up to us to turn our back on them.
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